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7-letter words containing h, e, a, l

  • haggler — to bargain in a petty, quibbling, and often contentious manner: They spent hours haggling over the price of fish.
  • haggles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of haggle.
  • haglike — Resembling a hag or some aspect of one; hideous, cronelike.
  • halberd — a shafted weapon with an axlike cutting blade, beak, and apical spike, used especially in the 15th and 16th centuries.
  • halbert — (weapons) An ancient long-handled weapon, of which the head had a point and several long, sharp edges, curved or straight, and sometimes additional points. The heads were sometimes of very elaborate form.
  • haldane — John Burdon Sanderson [bur-dn san-der-suh n] /ˈbɜr dn ˈsæn dər sən/ (Show IPA), 1892–1964, English biochemist, geneticist, and writer.
  • halesia — (botany) Any of the genus Halesia of American shrubs with white flowers.
  • halides — Plural form of halide.
  • haliers — Plural form of halier.
  • halleck — Fitz-Green [fits-green,, fits-green] /ˈfɪtsˌgrin,, fɪtsˈgrin/ (Show IPA), 1790–1867, U.S. poet.
  • halloed — Simple past tense and past participle of hallo.
  • halogen — any of the electronegative elements, fluorine, chlorine, iodine, bromine, and astatine, that form binary salts by direct union with metals.
  • halpernDaniel, born 1945, U.S. poet and editor.
  • halseny — A prediction; a prediction of evil.
  • halstedWilliam Stewart ("Brill") 1852–1922, U.S. surgeon and educator.
  • haltere — (entomology) A small knobbed structure in some two-winged insects, one of a pair that are flapped rapidly and function as accelerometers to maintain stability in flight.
  • halters — Plural form of halter.
  • halteth — Archaic third-person singular form of halt.
  • halvers — Plural form of halver.
  • hamelin — city in NW Germany, in the state of Lower Saxony: pop. 56,000
  • hamlets — Plural form of hamlet.
  • handled — fitted with or having a handle or handles, especially of a specified kind (often used in combination): a handled pot; a long-handled knife.
  • handler — a person or thing that handles.
  • handles — a part of a thing made specifically to be grasped or held by the hand.
  • handsel — a gift or token for good luck or as an expression of good wishes, as at the beginning of the new year or when entering upon a new situation or enterprise.
  • hansels — Plural form of hansel.
  • hapless — unlucky; luckless; unfortunate.
  • harelip — Usually Offensive. cleft lip.
  • harlech — a town in N Wales, in Gwynedd: noted for its ruined 13th-century castle overlooking Cardigan Bay: tourism. Pop: 1233 (2001)
  • harslet — Chiefly Southern U.S. haslet.
  • hartleyDavid, 1705–57, English physician and philosopher.
  • harwell — a village in S England, in Oxfordshire: atomic research station (1947)
  • haskell — (language)   (Named after the logician Haskell Curry) A lazy purely functional language largely derived from Miranda but with several extensions. Haskell was designed by a committee from the functional programming community in April 1990. It features static polymorphic typing, higher-order functions, user-defined algebraic data types, and pattern-matching list comprehensions. Innovations include a class system, systematic operator overloading, a functional I/O system, functional arrays, and separate compilation. Haskell 1.3 added many new features, including monadic I/O, standard libraries, constructor classes, labeled fields in datatypes, strictness annotations, an improved module system, and many changes to the Prelude. Mailing list: <[email protected]>. Yale Haskell - Version 2.0.6, Haskell 1.2 built on Common Lisp. Glasgow Haskell (GHC) - Version 2.04 for DEC Alpha/OSF2; HPPA1.1/HPUX9,10; SPARC/SunOs 4, Solaris 2; MIPS/Irix 5,6; Intel 80386/Linux,Solaris 2,FreeBSD,CygWin 32; PowerPC/AIX. GHC generates C or native code. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Haskell-B - Haskell 1.2 implemented in LML, generates native code. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • hasselt — a market town in E Belgium, capital of Limburg province. Pop: 69 127 (2004 est)
  • hassled — a disorderly dispute.
  • hassler — One who hassles.
  • hassles — Plural form of hassle.
  • hastely — (obsolete) Hastily.
  • hatable — meriting hatred or loathing.
  • hatchel — hackle1 (def 5).
  • hateful — arousing hate or deserving to be hated: the hateful oppression of dictators.
  • hatless — a shaped covering for the head, usually with a crown and brim, especially for wear outdoors.
  • haulage — the act or labor of hauling.
  • haulers — Plural form of hauler.
  • haulier — hauler.
  • havable — That can be had, possessed.
  • haverel — a person who talks nonsense or who babbles
  • haylage — silage of about 40 to 50 percent moisture made from forage stored in a silo.
  • hazelly — Of the light brown colour of hazel.
  • headful — A quantity sufficient to cover the head.
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